Girli Bars, Topless Bars and Night Clubs. Go to one of
the clubs in Wan Chai (Hong Kong Island) or Tsim
Sha Tsui (Kowloon Side) mentioned below. Invite the girls for a drink (around
50-100HK$) and ask them for sex. It is usually 3500HK$ for the
night. Friends have made good experience with it. If the girls are
drunken enough, they'll give you a discount (I know about 2500HK$).

Massage. In Wan Chai (Hong Kong Island) or Tsim
Sha Tsui (Kowloon Side) are a lot of Massage signs. They
offer full body massage for HK$200 - 1000. Sometimes a 'special'
massage is offered or you have to ask for it: They give you a hand
job for HK$ 50+ extra.

Mong Kok. In some houses in Mong Kok (Kowloon side,
near MTR station) they offer rooms with a bed and a showerplace with
massage, but it is just short time sex for around HK$ 500.

Ding Ling. South of Hong Kong are some Chinese Islands,
one of them is called Ding Ling. Chinese girls in Karaoke
bars or hair dressing salons offer their services for around HK$ 100.

Karaoke Bars.

Girli Bars, Topless Bars and Night Clubs.

Most Girli Bars, etc, you'll find in Wan Chai, Home of Suzie Wong, and
Tsim Sha Tsui. Girls are dancing there, mostly clothed (except the
topless bars), are mostly Philipinos, and for HK$100+ you can invite
them for a drink. If you ask them to stay with you overnight (eg. at
your place) then they charge HK$3500 (yes, this is no joke, I and my
friends tried it a couple of times), if she's drunken enough and/or
needs money, she gives you a discount (A friend once got her for
HK$2500). It is said to be good, but who can afford this as often as a
man needs sex???

Topless bar "Big Apple" on the main street in Kowloon near the
southernmost subway station: no cover charge, beer HK$ 50, ugly woman
and awful begging for a drink (which runs HK$ 110). One hour talking
with the topless woman is HK$ 300. NOT recommended.

Massage

Massage parlour at Cleverly Street and Des Veux Road Central on Hong
Kong Island: Full body massage, about one hour, HK$ 200, includes
walking on your back. Handjob costs an additional HK$ 50. The woman
was old, but good at massaging. After 40 mins, she asks whether a
handjob is wanted (sign language, no English).

You'll find many "Massage" signs in Kowloon side, like Tsim Sha Tsui
and Mong Kok, catering mostly to tourists. Much less tourists on Hong
Kong Island.

Mong Kok

Mong Kok on Kowloon side (has a MTR station) is ruled by the chinese
mafia called Triads (Eastern Express, August 1995). It has anything
that is illegal in HK: Hardcore movies (3 for 100HK$), drugs,
prostitution, gambling.

You just go upstairs any house with a chinese only light
advertisement. They have rooms with toilet/bath, TV and bed. You tell
the guy/lady at the entrance what/what country/what style you prefer
and after 20-30 minutes waiting and watching boring american hard core
movies a girls shows up. Send her back if you do not like her at
all. Shower (together, if you are able to arrange that), blowjob,
fucking. It was very fast and she showed too much that she did not like
it. My friend was very disappointed with his girl. HK$500 are paid
when you leave.

Ding Ling

The Eastern Express wrote on Monday, 5th June 1995:

Prostitute racket run by island PSB unit

A unit of the Zhuhai Public Security Bureau (PSB) is running a large
vice ring catering for HK clients, an Eastern Express investigation
has found.

The border patrol division, through its Zhuhai-registered company,
Beautiful Meetings Tourism Development Company, has established
several illegal points of entry to the [chinese] mainland and is
taking informal "visa fees" from visitors from the territory, as well
as commissions from thousands of prostitutes servicing affluent HK
clients.

On the island of Gwai Shan and Ding Ling, several kilometers off
southern Lantau [island that belongs to HK], PSB officers man
makeshift "immigration" huts charging visitors $25 for a one-day
"permit".

Visitors do not require formal visas or even passports, instead
registering their HK identity card numbers on arrival to ensure they
depart the island that day.

The company also owns several upmarket villas which serve as brothels
on Ling Ding.

A PSB officer on the island confirmed that the company was owned by
the border patrol unit and said authorization for any new business
must be sought from his superior officer in Gwai Shan.

Visitors from HK usually charter speedboats from the outlying islands
of Cheung Chau and Lantau, or board bigger vessels making regular
trips from Aberdeen, usually on Saturday evenings.

For $100 she will do anything - except tell you her real name.

She is a Ling Ding girl, one of hundreds of northern Chinese prostitutes
servicing HK clients on an island south of Cheung Chau [which belongs
to HK]. Like most of them she will tell you she is 20 years old, but
her phusique gives the lie to the claim. She is 16 at best, 12 or 13
at worst.

If you want something younger, or older, tell one of the dozens of
pimps milling around the streets or see the PSB officer at the
pier. This is China's new frontier and anything can be arranged for a
price.

Like their counterparts elsewhere in the world, the girls give
themselves working names, There are more than a few Candys and dozens
named after flowers.

There are no solo operators -- no street walkers. It is not
allowed. Instead the girls work out of either karoke lounges or, more
commonly, "barber shops".

Karaoke lounges have the usual bar, video screen and couches. A HK
visitor is often on the microphone, drunkenly serenading his love of
the hour.

Clients are invited to "talk with a girl" but with the prostitutes
often speaking no Cantonese, and never English, the conversation
swiftly degenerates into scribbling figures on a bar mat. The next
stop is the room upstairs.

In barber shops the visitors are asked if they want a massage or a
shampoo. They do not cut hair.

Karaoke Bars.

The South China Morning Post wrote on Sunday, September 3, on page 3:

Schoolgirls stay clear of summer vice

Police believe they have prevented the employment of underage girls in
karaoke bars during the school holidays despite the shelving of plans
for tougher regulations to control the vice establishments.

Social workers strongly opposed the shelving of the plan proposed 1993
as they said they still had young clients working part-time in karaoke
bars, singing and providing sexual services to customers.

Hundreds of girls, some as young as 12, were arrested in karaoke bars
in Mongkok and Yau Tsim districts during the summer
holidays 1993 and 1994. But the number shrank to none this summer
after 31 karaoke bars which could not cope with police raids and
prosecutions closed one after the other.

A Security Branch spokesman said the Fight Crime Committee had
recently "advised that the licensing option for the control of karaoke
establishments should not be pursued for the time being".

It said it was because the number of underage girls working in dubious
karaoke establishments decreased by almost 50 per cent in 1994 and
there were indications that the karaoke craze was beginning to fade.

The committee also felt that a licensing scheme was expensive to
administer and not cost-effective in controlling vice activities.

A Fight Crime Committee member and prospective legislator, James To
Kun-sun, and Yang Memorial Methodist Social Service's outreach service
division supervisor, Philip Can Shiu-kan, strongly opposed the shelving
of the proposal.

Mr. Chan said his colleagues still had young clients working part-time
in karaoke bars.

The legal loophole is still there. If it is not plugged, the problem
can't be rooted out," Mr Chan said.